. Pinocchio : the tale of a puppet . keep your earspricked and to bark. After giving him this last injunction the manwent into the house, shut the door, and put up thechain. Poor Pinocchio remained lying on the groundmore dead than alive from the effects of cold, hunger,and fear. From time to time he put his handsangrily to the collar that tightened his throat andsaid, crying: It serves me right! . . Decidedly it serves THE ADVENTURES OF PINOCCHIO 125 me right! I was determined to be a vagabond anda good-for-nothing. ... I would listen to badcompanions, and that is why I always meet withmisfor


. Pinocchio : the tale of a puppet . keep your earspricked and to bark. After giving him this last injunction the manwent into the house, shut the door, and put up thechain. Poor Pinocchio remained lying on the groundmore dead than alive from the effects of cold, hunger,and fear. From time to time he put his handsangrily to the collar that tightened his throat andsaid, crying: It serves me right! . . Decidedly it serves THE ADVENTURES OF PINOCCHIO 125 me right! I was determined to be a vagabond anda good-for-nothing. ... I would listen to badcompanions, and that is why I always meet withmisfortunes. If I had been a good little boy as somany are ; if I had been willing to learn and towork ; if I had remained at home with my poorpapa, I should not now be in the midst of the fieldsand obliged to be the watch-dog to a peasantshouse. Oh, if I could be born again ! But now itis too late, and I must have patience! Relieved by this little outburst, which camestraight from his heart, he went into the dog-kenneland fell


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